Social Media Tips

It is going to take community support to drive action toward healthy changes for our kids. Fortunately, social media allows you to share your message with a wider audience than traditional door-to-door grassroots work can. With a few clicks, you can access the right people at the right moment, making them aware of the issue and garnering their support. The following tips will help you do just that: extend your community of advocates online to create an even bigger groundswell of support for the cause. National experts may already have sample resources you can model after or tailor for use in your campaign.

Using Images and Videos

Posts with multimedia, such as videos and images, drive higher engagement rates and increased reach—people like looking and clicking on images and video. Below is a quick overview of how you can best put multimedia to use on Facebook and Twitter:

Images

Choose a diverse range of people. It’s important that different groups see people that look like themselves in the images you use.

Only use content you own. If your organization has an existing photo library, search to see if anything can be repurposed. Getty Images offers free, non-commercial use of any of its stock images on social media and blog sites when you use its embed feature.

Repurpose print materials online. The postcard, flyer, and fact sheet included in this toolkit can easily be posted or linked to on Facebook and Twitter.

The postcard is especially useful as a featured image to supplement your Facebook posts.

Invite advocates to print the flyer and post it at work or around their neighborhood.

Save a PDF of the fact sheet and link to it from your post, inviting advocates to read and learn more or share it with friends and family.

Videos

Highlight your advocates. If you have access to a video camera or even a smartphone, consider creating a video of advocate stories. Ask your advocates to talk about their role in the campaign and why they support programs that help kids live healthier lives. Be sure to produce videos in appropriate languages spoken in the community.

Stories of real-life advocates can be one of the most effective measures for swaying decision makers, because they represent actual constituents’ opinions on the policies you care about.

You can greatly improve smartphone video with a few simple steps. Always hold your smartphone horizontally, shoot in brightly lit areas, and try for the best audio possible. You can improve the audio quality greatly with inexpensive microphones you can easily buy online.

Create mini-documentaries. For example, a short film highlighting the story of kids in your community and how they are impacted by the lack of physical education programs in school. Keep in mind that the most viewed and shared videos are less than 90 seconds.

Facebook

Especially if you already have an established presence, Facebook can be an excellent way to engage your existing advocates and recruit new ones. Below are a few tips for spreading the word on Facebook:

Use your existing account. Do not create a new page just for this issue. This way, when new people “like” your page because of this issue, they will also stay in the loop on your other initiatives.

Recruit new members right from Facebook. Consider creating a registration app on your page so users can sign up to be a part of the effort without even leaving Facebook. You can point potential advocates to the registration app through Facebook ads and posts on your wall.

Highlight key posts by pinning them to the top of your page. Select the drop down arrow on the right-hand corner of your post and choose to pin it to the top of your page if you’d like to call attention to it for a certain period of time.

Use images to help advocates identify with your cause. The postcard in this toolkit can be repurposed to create an image advocates can use on their own profiles. Consider using the front side of the postcard to do the following:

Make it your page’s cover photo, and ask advocates to tag themselves and their friends in the image. That way, their tags show up on their newsfeed and in their friends’ notifications.

Encourage advocates to make the postcard their cover photo or profile picture as well. The advocates’ friends will see the images on their profiles, helping to raise awareness about the issue. Make sure to give advocates a caption to go with their post telling viewers to go to your site to help.

On Twitter, encourage advocates to make the postcard their banner picture so their followers will see the image.

Share the message with decision makers. Many states’ decision makers have an online presence, which can be an effective venue for them to hear from advocates.

As advocates tag themselves in your cover photo, encourage them to tag their decision makers as well. Note that some decision makers may have set their privacy to restrict this.

Encourage advocates to tag their decision makers in their Facebook posts about your issue’s support.

A post that tags a legislator should be considered a direct communication to that legislator, so it will be lobbying if it reflects a view on specific legislation. A post that does not tag a legislator is a public communication and will be lobbying only if it reflects a view on specific legislation and it includes a call-to-action. Note that if a social media post constitutes lobbying, the staff time related to writing the post is attributable to lobbying, however small the cost of that staff time may be.

Ask advocates for a response.

Create posts that encourage advocates to interact.

Ask questions.

Keep them accountable.

Highlight partners. There may be other community organizations working on the same or related issues.

Consider working with them to highlight each other’s work in Facebook posts. That way, your mention will show up on their channels (and vice versa), giving you leverage to reach their community for recruitment purposes.

Take online actions offline. There are many creative ways to share several items in this toolkit—the poster, flyer, fact sheet, etc.—on Facebook and encourage people to distribute them in their communities.

Ask advocates to print the flyers and hand them out at events in their town or post them on community message bulletin boards in parks, libraries, or coffee shops. Bring the action back online by asking advocates to post a picture of themselves putting up the flyers.

Post the decision maker fact sheet on your Facebook page so that it is available to advocates for use in their own meetings with decision makers. Moreover, of course, ask them to come back to the Facebook page to report on what they are doing and how their own meetings went.

Ad Campaigns

Promote your posts. Promoted posts take highlighted posts one step further by elevating them in your fans’ newsfeeds. Promoted posts have a nominal cost and their benefits are far-reaching. In this toolkit, we have provided a suggested image for a promoted post. Use the image and then assign corresponding text to it.

Promoted posts come with a range of pricing options, depending on how many fans your page has and how many people you would like to reach with your post. You will have the option to elevate your post in your fans’ newsfeeds or in both their newsfeeds and their friends’ newsfeeds. On top of this, you can target promoted posts by age, gender, and location. You can promote posts right from your Facebook page; look in the lower right-hand corner of the post you want to elevate. Click on “Boost Post,” select your dollar amount and audience reach, and then enter credit card details for payment.

Create an ad campaign through Facebook Ads Manager. You can also turn promoted posts into a wider Facebook advertising campaign, which will allow you to target specific audiences in a way not feasible from your Facebook page.

Define the audience(s) you’d like to reach and how much budget you’d like to spend (even a small amount will make a difference and get results). First, select age and gender targeting and then type in interests. Remember to include broad interest topics to reach as wide an audience as possible.

For targeting based on location, workplace, behavior, school, relationship status, or languages, click the appropriate button and add in targeting criteria. Consider groups you used during your recruitment phase—parents or teachers, for example—and target them based on related interests like local parenting groups or the Parent Teacher Association.

You can also target audiences based on whether they are already fans of your organization on Facebook.

Select photos or videos from your page to include in the ad if needed. You could also upload new content directly during this step.

Finally, place your order and launch your paid campaign!

Key Takeaways

Social media can be a powerful way to share your message with a broader, more diverse audience.

People respond well to posts with multimedia, so try to include images and video you own whenever possible.

Use social media to encourage advocates to interact on social media channels and as a way to support your offline activities.

A small investment in paid advertising, like Facebook ads, can make a big difference for your campaign.